. The Conii seemed to have played no significant role in the
Second Punic War and subsequent conflicts, even though they were constantly under the pressure from the northernly Celtic tribes throughout the 3rd to 2nd centuries BC, which may explain their willingness to place themselves under the protection of foreign powers such as
Carthage and later
Rome. Around the 3rd century BC, the
Celtici reached the western Algarve, establishing a colony at
Laccobriga (
Monte Molião, near
Lagos) and in 153 BC, during the
Lusitanian Wars against Rome, Conistorgis fell to the
Lusitani and their
Vettones' allies. The Conii were thence forced to switch their allegiance from the
Roman Republic to the Lusitani, being subjected in 141-140 BC to Consul
Quintus Fabius Maximus Servilianus’ reprisal campaigns in the Iberian southwest. In 138-137 BC the Cyneticum was aggregated into
Hispania Ulterior province, only to become again a battleground during the
Sertorian Wars, when
Quintus Sertorius seized Conistorgis and Consul
Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius devastated the region in retaliation.
Romanization In 27-13 BC the romanized Conii were incorporated into
Lusitania province. ==See also==